
“When we signed up, we signed up for three movies, so the next two were all icing on the cake.Ĭongrats to designer Billy Reid! He just opened his first Los Angeles outpost, a pop-up at Platform in Culver City. Will we see an “Indiana Jones 6”? “I don’t know,” Marshall said. You look back at all the movies and you get emotional, because that’s your life and your career. “We’ve been together for 40 years, and we feel like we made a really good movie. “We all got emotional,” Marshall told me at the “Redeem Team” premiere. “Indiana Jones” producer Frank Marshall says he wasn’t surprised that Harrison Ford got a bit emotional while promoting the fifth installment of the franchise onstage at D23. ©Paramount Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE, from left: Sean Connery, Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones, 1989. “You definitely get the idea of collaboration, but you don’t get to tell them what it’s going to be and how it’s going to be.” “We’ve talked and communicated about what we want that story to be going forward and how it’ll fit in his new Marvel universe,” Mackie explained.

We do know that Mackie will star in “Captain America: New World Order.” The plot is under wraps, but Mackie says he’s been talking with screenwriter Malcolm Spellman. They call you the week before and are like, ‘We own your ass. “I have no idea,” he told me while promoting his new partnership with roofing manufacturer GAF to help residents of his hometown of New Orleans whose roofs were damaged by natural disasters. 19, 2021 – Actor Anthony Mackie photographed in the Tremé District of New Orleans.Īnthony Mackie insists he doesn’t know if he’ll make an appearance as Captain America in “Thunderbolts,” the Marvel Studios film set to star Florence Pugh, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Sebastian Stan, David Harbour and Wyatt Russell. They’re stepping up again in the wake of Hurricane Fiona as we all have to.” And I’ve been happy to see them really step up in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico, supporting us when we took ‘Hamilton’ there to raise money for arts organizations, supporting local businesses on the island. “I was happy to partner with Amex on those causes. I really believe that - I still live in the neighborhood,” Miranda says. “My first show, ‘In the Heights,’ is about those businesses and the fact that they’re Latino-owned and family-owned, and they make my neighborhood special. He praises American Express for its ongoing support of Latino-owned businesses. That’s been kind of an amazing revelation to me.” When theater-goers come to New York to see a show, they stop at the Drama Book Shop. When the Omicron wave shuts down shows and cancels performances, we have a bad week. “When Broadway has a good week, we have a good week. “The store’s success is inextricably tied to the health of the theater community,” Miranda said. Miranda and Kail first worked on “In the Heights” in the original store’s basement 20 years ago. In San Diego, Miranda spoke to conference-goers about Drama Book Shop, the century-old bookstore that he bought about four years ago along with director Thomas Kail, producer Jeffrey Seller and theater owner James L. If that’s the thing that makes you mad, then stay mad.
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Halle is perfect for the part,” said the Tony winner, who wrote four songs for the movie with composer Alan Menken. “I’m not interested in giving them any oxygen because I know the lives that are going to be changed. Just take a look at the sneak peek of Bailey singing a snippet of “Part of Your World,” which racked up 104 million global views within days of its debut at the D23 Expo. I’m really thrilled by that symmetry.”īesides, Miranda thinks the positivity and excitement around the new film far outweigh the negativity. “And Rob Marshall was the choreographer on that and is now the director of the movie. Lin-Manuel Miranda has a message to the trolls who have targeted their hate at Halle Bailey, star of the live-action adaptation of “The Little Mermaid” - watch Brandy in “Cinderella.” “I’m old enough to remember that being a game changer for my generation,” Miranda told me during a Zoom chat from the L’Attitude conference in San Diego, where he was making an appearance with American Express to support Latino small business owners. Welcome to this week’s “Just for Variety.”
